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The Milosevic case: Questions and
answers.
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August 29, 2001.
Question: Can the United Nations Security Council establish
an international court?
Answer: The Security Council has, under Chapter VII
of the United Nations Charter, "paramount responsibility" for
dealing with threats to international peace and security. Under this
authority the Security Council has taken many steps, including
dispatching peacekeepers to conflict zones, including the former
Yugoslavia. On May 25, 1993, the Security Council adopted Resolution
827 establishing a court to try those responsible for the worst
crimes committed in the Yugoslav conflict. When an earlier defendant
before the tribunal challenged its creation, his claims were
unanimously dismissed by Tribunal judges from Italy, Egypt, China,
Canada, and Pakistan.
The Security Council also established a similar tribunal to try
those responsible for the 1994 genocide in Rwanda. The United
Nations General Assembly has no such authority.
Question: Is there an "anti-Serb bias" at the Tribunal?
Answer: The Tribunal is empowered to investigate
anyone, regardless of nationality, who committed serious crimes in
the course of the conflicts in the former Yugoslavia. As of March
2001, the Tribunal had publicly indicted 66 individuals, 50 of them
Serbs. It recently handed a down a forty-five year prison sentence
against a Croatian army general accused of war crimes. From its
field investigations of the conduct of all sides to the conflicts in
the former Yugoslavia, Human Rights Watch has found that the
majority of crimes were committed by Serb forces. Not
insignificantly, Serb forces were the only ones to participate in
each of the conflicts-in Croatia, Bosnia-Herzegovina, and Kosovo.
Question: Can Slobodan Milosevic get a fair trial before
this Court, which is strongly supported by NATO countries? Isn't the
trial of Milosevic "victors' justice"?
Answer: While the tribunal is not perfect (no court
is), the ICTY functions according to the highest standards of
international justice. This means that Mr. Milosevic will receive
all the guarantees necessary for a fair trial. Its proceedings have
to date resulted in the acquittal of a number of defendants,
including Serbs, on various charges. If the Tribunal falls short in
protecting any of Milosevic's rights to mount a vigorous defense, it
should be criticized and change its practice.
The ICTY is an international court. The pre-trial judges hearing the
initial proceedings are from the United Kingdom, Jamaica, and
Morocco. As of April 2001, the Tribunal employed a staff of 1,103
from 74 different countries. While certainly there are citizens from
NATO countries serving at all levels of the Tribunal, if there is a
specific conflict of interest, that individual should recuse him or
herself from the proceedings.
Question: Why hasn't the Tribunal tried NATO officials for
war crimes in Yugoslavia?
Answer: The tribunal carried out an investigation
into the conduct of NATO forces during the conflict in Kosovo and
concluded that there was insufficient evidence to support a
prosecution.
Human Rights Watch itself conducted extensive field research into
the 1999 NATO air war against Yugoslavia. We found that 500
civilians were killed and 90 targets were selected inappropriately
because they were civilian targets. We concluded that these
incidents, which violated the laws of war, did not, however, rise to
the more serious level of "grave breaches" or war crimes that the
tribunal is empowered to prosecute.
If other evidence of NATO culpability for war crimes does arise, it
would be essential for the tribunal to investigate those
allegations. If the evidence warrants, the court should investigate
and, if need be, prosecute those responsible for the alleged crimes.
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